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MENDELIAN GENETICS PART II Co-Dominance, Incomplete Dominance, and Epistasis By C Kohn Dept of Agricultural Sciences, WUHS
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Mendelian Genetics Part II

Feb 06, 2016

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Co-Dominance, Incomplete Dominance, and Epistasis By C Kohn Dept of Agricultural Sciences, WUHS. Mendelian Genetics Part II. Review. Last week we discussed Basic Mendelian Genetics – Some genes are dominant and are always expressed - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

MENDELIAN GENETICS PART IICo-Dominance, Incomplete Dominance, and EpistasisBy C KohnDept of Agricultural Sciences, WUHS

Page 2: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Review

Last week we discussed Basic Mendelian Genetics – Some genes are dominant and are always

expressed Some genes are recessive and only expressed if

no dominant genes are present Every individual has at least 2 alleles (versions)

of every gene Parents each contribute an equal number of

alleles to their offspring The allele they contribute is a result of random

chance.

Page 3: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

This week

This week we’ll take it up a notch. Genes aren’t always exclusively

recessive or dominant. Sometimes they are a mixture of one

or the other or both. Sometimes a gene requires a

different gene to be expressed or silenced in order for it to be expressed.

Page 4: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Red + White = Pink

Incomplete Dominance

Page 5: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Incomplete Dominance Incomplete dominance occurs when neither

allele is dominant. For example, if flower is red and the other flower

is white, they may have offspring that have a mix of both of their traits – pink.

If red and white parentshave pink offspring, the gene for color would be incompletely dominant.

Incomplete dominance =A mix of Dominant and Recessive

Page 6: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Incomplete Dominance & Punnett Squares In Incomplete Dominance, nothing changes

with the Punnett Square (except that we now have 3 phenotypes instead of 2)

In this case, White is rr, Red is RR, and the pink heterozygous offspringare Rr.

R R

r

r

Rr Rr

Rr Rr

Page 7: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Red + White = ROAN

Co-Dominance

Page 8: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Co-Dominance Co-Dominance is a little more tricky. In Co-Dominance, multiple traits can

be dominant. For example, in livestock and horses,

a unique color called “Roan” exists. Roan looks pink, but it is

NOT pink – Roan is a blend of red and white hair.

Page 9: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Roan – Red AND White

A close-up of a roan animal’s coat shows that the hair is not pink – it is BOTH red and white.

Page 10: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Roan & Co-Dominance

Roan occurs because in some cattle and horses, both red and white hair are dominant.

The sire (father) is on the left and is white The mother is on the right and is dun (reddish brown).

The colt is Dun Roan – a blend of white and dun hairs.

Page 11: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Co-Dominance and Punnett Squares Co-Dominance is a little more tricky in

Punnett Squares. Because both traits are dominant, both need

to be capitalized. Because both need to be capitalized, we need

two different letters to show co-dominance.

R R

W

W

RW RW

RW RW

Page 12: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

A + B = A, B, AB, or O

Co-Dominance & Blood Type

Page 13: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Co-Dominance & Blood Type

Co-dominance plays a very distinct role in blood type.

Both Type A and Type B blood are dominant.

Type O blood is recessive. If your father contributes the gene

for Type A and your mother the gene for Type B, you will be Type AB, or co-dominant for blood type.

Page 14: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Blood Type & Punnett Squares In a Punnett Square, we write out

blood type as either IA , IB , or i (for the recessive O type).

If you had both IA and i (O) blood types, only the A allele would be expressed and you would have Type A blood. The same is true for Type B blood.

The only way to have Type O blood is if you received both recessive alleles – i and i

Page 15: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Blood Type & Punnett Squares In a Punnett Square, you might see the

following: Suppose one parent is heterozygous for

Type A and O blood; the other parent is heterozygous for Type B and O blood.

A Punnett Square would look like the one below:

This means there is a ¼ chance their child could have AB, A, B, or O blood.

IA i

IB

i

IA IB IB i

IA i i i

Page 16: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Why Blood Type Matters

This matters because your blood type is sort of like the team you cheer for.

Blood Type represents the protein coating of your blood. If you have Type A, your body in instructed to kill off Type B and vice versa. If you were Type A and given Type B, there

would be blood cell gang-warfare in your body.

Type A cannot receive any Type B and vice versa.

Page 17: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Type O and Type AB Donors

Your body cannot recognize Type O because it has no coating. Anyone can receive Type O blood without a

problem Type O people can only receive Type O blood

Type AB is the universal recipient – Because they have both A and B, they can

receive either A or B (or O or AB) without any problems

They can only give to other AB Type people though.

Page 18: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

White + White = White, Yellow, or Green

Epistasis

Page 19: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Epistasis

Your genes do not operate in isolation from each other.

The expression of one gene can affect the expression of another gene. E.g. men have the genes for mammary

production but obviously do not express them because of other male genes

Epistasis - the interaction between two or more genes to control a single phenotype

Page 20: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Epistasis & Squash

Epistasis is easily visible in squash. In squash, two genes work together

to determine color. The “W” gene determines if the

squash is white or colored (white is dominant)

The “G” gene determines if the squash is yellow or green (yellow is dominant)

To determine the color or lack thereof, we have to look at both genes.

Page 21: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Squash & Epistasis

WW or Ww – the squash is colorless (white)

ww – the squash has color GG or Gg – the squash, if colored, is

yellow gg – the squash, if colored, is green.

White = W_G_ or W_g_ Yellow = wwG_ Green = wwgg

Page 22: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Squash & Epistasis Problem Imagine we have a double-

heterozygous squash (WwGg) This would be a white squash

We cross-pollinate our double-heterozygous squash with another of the same genotype. WwGg x WwGg

What would their offspring look like?

Page 23: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Larger Punnett Squares

To solve this problem, we would need to create a 16-square Punnett Square

WG Wg wG wg

WG

Wg

wG

wg

WWGG

WWGg

WwGG

WwGg

WWGg

WWgg

WwGg Wwgg

WwGG

WwGg wwGG wwGg

WwGg Wwgg wwGg wwgg

Page 24: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Larger Punnett Squares To create this kind of Punnett Square, begin by

adding the parents to the top and side. WwGg becomes – 1) WG; 2) Wg; 3) wG; 4) wg Each allele has to be paired with all other alleles.

WG Wg wG wgWwGg___________________________________________________

WwGgWG

Wg

wG

wg

Page 25: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Larger Punnett Squares Next, fill in each row by pairing the

W’s and the G’s to make the offspring’s genotype. Capital letters (dominant traits) are

always listed first. WG Wg wG wg

WG

Wg

wG

wg

WWGG

WWGg

WwGG

WwGg

WWGg

WWgg

WwGg Wwgg

WwGG

WwGg wwGG wwGg

WwGg Wwgg wwGg wwgg

Page 26: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Larger Punnett Squares

Finally, determine your offspring’s phenotypes.

WG Wg wG wg

WG

Wg

wG

wg

WWGG

WWGg

WwGG

WwGg

WWGg

WWgg

WwGg Wwgg

WwGG

WwGg wwGG wwGg

WwGg Wwgg wwGg wwgg

Page 27: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Larger Punnett Squares In this case, we’d see the following (again,

colorless is dominant; any W’s mean no color) 12 white; 3 yellow; 1 green (always make sure

you add up to 16)WG Wg wG wg

WG

Wg

wG

wg

WWGG

WWGg

WwGG

WwGg

WWGg

WWgg

WwGg Wwgg

WwGG

WwGg wwGG wwGg

WwGg Wwgg wwGg wwgg

Page 28: Mendelian  Genetics Part II

Conclusion

Incomplete Dominance – when two traits blend to create a new trait (e.g. Red + White = Pink)

Co-Dominance – when two traits are both dominant (e.g. Type AB blood)

Epistasis – when one gene affects the expression of another gene.